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Justice and Home Affairs

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Title: Justice and Home Affairs


1
Justice and Home Affairs
  • Presented by Emine Yuseinova

Date 11-12-2004
2
Brief Background to JHA Cooperation
  • Co-operation between Member States in the
    area of Justice and Home Affairs (JHA) began in
    the mid-1970s on an informal, intergovernmental
    basis which was outside the Community framework.
    The Treaty on European Union (TEU), which entered
    into force on 1 November 1993, put the JHA area
    on a more formal footing by incorporating JHA in
    an established intergovernmental framework,
    specifically Title VI TEU.

3
Brief Background to JHA Cooperation
  • On 1 May 1999, the Treaty of Amsterdam came
    into force and made significant changes in the
    field of JHA with a focus on the creation of an
    area of freedom, security and justice. The Treaty
    added a new Title IV to the Treaty establishing
    the European Community (TEC) which covers visas,
    asylum, immigration and other policies related to
    the free movement of persons. This Title also
    covers measures in the field of judicial
    co-operation in civil matters having cross-border
    implications. The intergovernmental framework
    continues to apply to police and customs
    co-operation and co-operation in criminal law
    matters.

4
The origins of cooperation
  • The 1967 Naples Convention on cooperation and
    mutual assistance between customs administrations
    provided the first framework for exchanges
    between Member States. From 1975 onwards,
    intergovernmental cooperation slowly began to
    develop outside the Community's legal framework
    for dealing with immigration, the right of asylum
    and police and judicial cooperation. Informal
    arrangements were established for sharing
    experiences, exchanging information and expertise
    and setting up networks to facilitate contacts
    between Member States.

5
The origins of cooperation
  • With this aim in mind, working parties such as
    the Trevi Group were set up consisting of
    officials from the appropriate departments in the
    Member States. Although the original remit of the
    Trevi Group covered terrorism and internal
    security, its scope was extended in 1985 to cover
    illegal immigration and organised crime.
  • Meanwhile, beginning in 1984, the Ministers for
    Justice and Home Affairs were holding regular
    six-monthly meetings on specific subjects (such
    as police, judicial and customs cooperation or
    the free movement of persons).

6
From the Single Act to the Maastricht Treaty
  • In 1986 the Single Act marked a turning
    point in intergovernmental cooperation. Article
    8a of the Act provides for the creation of a
    single internal market based on four fundamental
    freedoms the free movement of goods, capital,
    services and persons. The free movement of
    workers , particularly the right to reside in
    other Member States, was already well developed.
  • The idea of freedom of movement for all
    (European citizens and non-European nationals),
    which entails the abolition of border controls,
    was more difficult to achieve because of
    reluctance on the part of some Member States. At
    the same time, the idea was born that the free
    movement of persons had to be accompanied by
    compensatory measures, such as the strengthening
    of external border controls and the definition of
    European asylum and immigration policies.

7
From the Single Act to the Maastricht Treaty
  • Since progress on the free movement of
    persons and on cooperation in the field of
    justice and home affairs was proving difficult to
    achieve within the Community framework, France,
    Germany and the Benelux countries concluded an
    agreement in this area at Schengen in 1985,
    together with an implementing convention, which
    was signed in 1990. The aim was to make it easier
    to abolish internal border checks while improving
    controls at external borders and to harmonise
    arrangements relating to visas, asylum and police
    and judicial cooperation.

8
From the Single Act to the Maastricht Treaty
  • While this cooperation has enabled some
    Member States to forge ahead, this
    intergovernmental approach raises certain
    problems, which observers have been careful to
    point out. Firstly, it is difficult to coordinate
    the activities of the working parties. The
    various groups set up over the years deliberate
    separately and report to different groups of
    ministers, so that sometimes work is duplicated.
    Moreover, by the very nature of such cooperation,
    neither the European Parliament nor the national
    parliaments can control measures taken in this
    way. The instruments employed are those of
    traditional intergovernmental cooperation
    agreements and the drafting of resolutions,
    conclusions and recommendations.

9
From the Single Act to the Maastricht Treaty
  • To improve the effectiveness of cooperation in
    the field of justice and home affairs and to
    ensure more democratic control, the working
    parties needed to be brought under one umbrella
    within the legal framework of the European Union.

10
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • The 1993 Union Treaty (TEU) provided a new basis
    for collaboration between all the Member States
    in the field of justice and home affairs by
    adding a third pillar to the structure of the
    Community.
  • The new form of cooperation covered nine areas
    considered to be of common interest asylum
    policy the crossing of external borders
    immigration combating drug addiction combating
    international fraud judicial cooperation in
    civil matters judicial cooperation in criminal
    matters customs cooperation police cooperation.

11
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • It incorporated the existing working parties into
    a complex five-tier structure specific working
    parties, steering committees, a Coordinating
    Committee set up under Article 36 of the Union
    Treaty, the Committee of Permanent
    Representatives and the Council of Ministers for
    Justice and Home Affairs. The Schengen
    arrangements were kept on the back burner, to a
    certain extent, as not all the Member States
    accepted their objectives.

12
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • The third pillar's decision-taking mechanisms,
    which were based on those of the Common Foreign
    and Security Policy , very quickly created
    problems.
  • Mainly, the distinction between the provisions
    contained in the EC Treaty and those in the EU
    Treaty was often blurred, therefore demarcation
    problems arose, which, on the other hand, were
    not conducive to taking action or decisions.

13
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • Seen from an institutional perspective, the
    third pillar as constructed by the Maastricht
    Treaty gives the Community institutions only a
    limited role and no real opportunity to control
    decisions taken by the Member States. Some of the
    most frequently mentioned problems are
  • the limitations on legal control by the Court of
    Justice, which is permitted to interpret
    conventions and resolve disputes between Member
    States only where the possibility is expressly
    provided for in the text

14
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • the lack of information reaching the European
    Parliament, which, under the terms of the Treaty,
    should be consulted by the Council but is usually
    informed after the event and is therefore unable
    to express an opinion on discussions while they
    are taking place
  • the European Commission's right of initiative is
    limited to six of the nine areas covered by Title
    VI of the EU Treaty and is shared with the Member
    States (the Member States alone can initiate
    measures in relation to judicial cooperation in
    criminal, police and customs matters)
  • the Council's decisions must be unanimous, which
    often paralyses decision-taking.

15
Title VI of the Treaty on European Union
  • These difficulties facing cooperation in justice
    and home affairs explain the requests made and
    criticisms voiced by the Commission, Parliament
    and other bodies at the discussions held before
    and during the 1996-97 Intergovernmental
    Conference which produced the Treaty of Amsterdam.

16
The amendments made by the Treaty of Amsterdam
  • The Treaty of Amsterdam changed the nature
    of cooperation in the field of justice and home
    affairs by defining the area of freedom,
    security, and justice in more ambitious and more
    precise terms, by improving its effectiveness, by
    making it more democratic and by establishing a
    better balance between the roles of the various
    institutions. The aim is to establish the free
    movement of European Union citizens and non-EU
    nationals throughout the Union within the next
    five years, while guaranteeing public security by
    combating all forms of organised crime
    (trafficking in human beings, sexual exploitation
    of children, vehicle, arms and drug trafficking,
    corruption, fraud) and terrorism.

17
The amendments made by the Treaty of Amsterdam
  • Closer cooperation between police forces and
    judicial authorities on crime
  • Introduced by the Treaty of Amsterdam, closer
    cooperation enables the most ambitious Member
    States to work together more intensively while
    also leaving the door open to the other Member
    States. Those Member States wishing to establish
    closer cooperation can use the institutions,
    procedures and mechanisms provided for by the
    Union Treaty and the EC Treaty.

18
Tampere Summit
  • The Tampere summit, devoted to the creation
    of an area of freedom, security and justice,
    considered that the establishment of such an area
    was as important as the establishment of the
    single market in its day. The Heads of State and
    Government thus invited the Commission to produce
    a " scoreboard " listing all the measures to be
    taken in the next five years and keeping progress
    under review. The aim is to develop an open and
    secure European Union, fully committed to the
    obligations of the Geneva Refugee Convention and
    other relevant human rights instruments, and to
    improve European citizens' access to justice
    throughout the Union.

19
The amendments made by the Nice Treaty- the
Member States decided that most of the JHA
areas would no longer require unanimity, but
would be subject to the co-decision procedure.
  • Since the 1999 Tampere European Council,
    the Member States have stated on several
    occasions that the principle of mutual
    recognition must be the cornerstone of a European
    area of freedom, security and justice. To an
    extent, the terrorist attacks of 11 September
    2001 in the United States accelerated the
    decision-making process in the European Union.

20
The Laeken European Council
  • At the meetings held in the wake of the attacks
    (extraordinary JHA Council of 20 September 2001,
    extraordinary meeting of the European Council in
    Brussels on 21 September 2001), the Member States
    undertook to take decisive action against
    increasingly transnational organised crime. The
    Laeken European Council provided an opportunity
    to assess the progress made and to discuss key
    issues such as Eurojust, the European arrest
    warrant and the framework decision on combating
    terrorism .
  • In view of the recent and forthcoming enlargement
    , cooperation in the field of justice and home
    affairs has assumed ever greater importance in
    Europe.

21
Justice and Home Affairs
  • Citizens of the EU expect to live without
    fear of persecution or violence wherever they may
    live. EU legislation in Justice and Home Affairs
    (JHA) has been designed to address and deal with
    the following issues
  • political asylum
  • illegal immigration
  • Organized crime
  • Terrorism
  • Citizenship

22
Justice and Home Affairs
  • 6. Criminal justice
  • Customs cooperation
  • Fundamental rights
  • freedom to travel
  • Minority protection
  • Police cooperation
  • JHA has even engaged in the areas of external
    relations and enlargement.
  • As more and more citizens take advantage of their
    rights to move around the EU for either business
    or personal reasons, the need for greater
    co-operation between national forces, customs
    services and legal systems is set to increase
    enormously.

23
Political Asylum
  • A pressing issue today is how to cope in an area
    without internal frontiers with large numbers of
    immigrants and asylum seekers while respecting
    Europes humanitarian traditions of welcoming
    foreigners and offering a safe haven to refugees
    from persecution and danger. While it remains up
    to individual Member States to decide whether or
    not to grant asylum, the EU has decided on an
    overall policy so that asylum-seekers are treated
    similarly by all EU countries.
  • The EU and Australia hold regular meetings on
    asylum policy at Senior Official level.

24
Immigration
  • Immigration When Labor Supply Increases,
  • Salaries Decrease

25
Immigration
  • In spite of the restrictive immigration policies
    which have been in place since the 1970s in most
    Member States, large numbers of migrants have
    continued to come to the EU looking for work
    together with asylum-seekers and illegal
    immigrants. Taking advantage of persons seeking a
    better life, smuggling and trafficking networks
    have taken hold across the EU. This situation
    meant that considerable resources have had to be
    mobilised to fight illegal migration especially
    to target traffickers and smugglers. Furthermore,
    the EU needs migrants in certain sectors and
    regions as one element of the policies being
    developed to deal with its economic and
    demographic needs.
  • Realising that a new approach to managing
    migration was necessary, the leaders of the EU
    set out at the October 1999 European Council in
    Tampere (Finland) the elements for a common EU
    immigration policy.

26
Organized Crime and Terrorism
  • People rightly expect the Union to tackle threats
    to their security, and to protect them from
    terrorism and serious, organised, cross-border
    crime. This requires close police and judicial
    cooperation to eliminate hiding places for
    criminals and their ill-gotten gains.
  • Criminal organisations always exploit the
    weaknesses of the legal and economic systems in
    which they operate, and the European Union gives
    them a wide open space in which to move around.
    Terrorists, drug barons, people traffickers,
    money launderers or fraudsters operate as if
    national frontiers do not exist they can plan a
    crime in one country, execute it in another and
    live in a third.

27
Police and Customs Cooperation
  • As more and more Europeans take advantage
    of their rights to move freely around the
    European Union (EU) either for business or
    personal reasons, the need for greater
    co-operation between national police forces,
    customs services and legal systems is set to
    increase enormously. Similarly, the activities of
    international terrorist groups and criminal
    organisations benefit from and use this freedom.
    To combat them efficiently, the EU's national law
    enforcement agencies must co-operate with their
    counterparts in other EU countries on an almost
    daily basis. Several measures have been put in
    place to help them work together quickly and
    efficiently.

28
Police and Customs Cooperation
  • In a European Union which is becoming a genuine
    single market, national customs authorities have
    a crucial role to play in fighting cross-border
    organised crime. Several measures have been put
    in place at EU level to help them work together
    quickly and efficiently.
  • Within their national competencies, customs
    administrations of the Member States contribute
    to thei fight against cross-border crime through
    the prevention, detection, investigation and
    prosecution of activities in the areas of
    irregular or illegal movement of goods, the
    trafficking in prohibited goods, money laundering
    and the protection of the financial, cultural and
    environmental interests as well as the health,
    safety and security of the EU citizens.

29
Combating Drugs
  • Different strategies are now in place to deal
    with the numerous problems drugs cause, and a
    specific EU agency the European Monitoring
    Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction provides a
    continuous flow of information.
  • Drug trafficking respects no borders and trends
    in drug use spread rapidly. National police
    forces can tackle drug-related crime only by
    working together. Policymakers, health
    practitioners and educators are more effective
    when they share information and target funding on
    a Union-wide basis. This is why the EU has
    launched an action plan on drugs and has a
    coordinated strategy of supporting national and
    local campaigns.

30
Combating Drugs
  • Law enforcement agencies cooperate to act against
    traffickers and to prevent drugs reaching the
    streets. The EU works with countries around the
    world to encourage them not to grow crops that
    can be turned into narcotics. Increasingly,
    synthetic drugs are produced in the Union and the
    police devote a great deal of energy to locating
    and shutting down the factories that make them.

31
Criminal Justice
  • The creation of a common area of freedom,
    security and justice has been asserted as an aim
    of the European Union since the Amsterdam treaty.
    As regards criminal justice, the aim is to ensure
    that cross-border crimes are dealt with more
    efficiently and that individuals have their
    rights guaranteed equally, no matter under which
    Member State's jurisdiction their case is being
    heard in, whether they are suspects, accused or
    victims.
  • Legal approximation, coordination of proceedings,
    mutual recognition of final decisions and
    strengthening mutual confidence in particular by
    protecting the rights of individuals are the
    major ways to strengthen judicial cooperation in
    criminal matters in the European Union.

32
Fundamental Rights
  • The Treaty of Amsterdam has given EU citizens
    additional fundamental rights to tackle most
    forms of discrimination on the grounds of
    nationality, race, sex, religious belief,
    disability, age or sexual orientation. In
    December 2000, a Charter of Fundamental Rights of
    the European Union was proclaimed by the European
    Parliament, the Council and the Commission.

33
Citizenship
  • Every person holding the nationality of a Member
    State of the European Union is a citizen of the
    Union. Citizenship of the Union supplements
    national citizenship without replacing it. It is
    made up of a set of rights enshrined in the EU
    Treaties.
  • EU citizenship is a set of rights additional to
    those of national citizenship (e.g. the right to
    move and reside freely within the EU the right
    to vote for and stand as a candidate at municipal
    and European Parliament elections in whichever
    Member State an EU citizen resides etc.)

34
Minority Protection
  • In the European Community's foundational
    documents, there was little attention to
    fundamental rights or freedoms. However, over
    time, the EU has increasingly articulated its
    aspiration to represent not only stability and
    prosperity, but also democratic values,
    culminating with the adoption of explicitly
    political criteria for EU membership at the
    Copenhagen Council in 1993, including respect
    for and protection of minorities.

35
Minority Protection
  • The immediate consequence of the Copenhagen
    declaration was that candidate States were
    required to demonstrate that they ensure minority
    protection in order to accede to the EU. This has
    led to intense scrutiny by the EU institutions,
    in particular the Commission, of the situation of
    vulnerable minorities in the candidate States.
    The Commission has produced annual Regular
    Reports evaluating the progress of each of the
    candidate countries in fulfilling the so-called
    Copenhagen criteria the political and
    economic criteria and ability to take on the
    obligations of membership (acquis).

36
Minority Protection
  • However, the requirement to demonstrate respect
    for, and protection of, minorities is as yet not
    matched in internal EU documents binding upon
    member States. Minority rights are until now
    excluded from EU-wide legislation and to date
    there are no explicit and binding minority
    protection standards on the EU level.

37
Enlargement
  • Justice and home affairs issues both new and
    crucial to EU enlargement process
  • Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
    Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and
    Slovenia have joined the European Union on 1 May
    2004. Negotiations are under way with Bulgaria
    and Romania and have not yet started with Turkey.
    For the first time in an EU enlargement process,
    justice and home affairs is part of the "acquis"
    which the acceding countries have to take on
    board to join the EU - an important part as it
    deals with fundamental rights, EU citizenship,
    freedom of circulation and residence, asylum and
    immigration, the judiciary, police and customs.

38
External Relations
  • Justice and home affairs a key area in the
    European Unions relations with third countries
    and international organisations
  • An essential component of developing the European
    Union into an area of freedom, security and
    justice is its external dimension, which includes
    cooperating with partner countries and
    international organizations to construct an area
    of peace, stability and prosperity encompassing
    the neighbors of an enlarged European Union.

39
Roma
  • Roma are one of the largest, but most neglected
    minorities in Europe. Their history is one of
    discrimination, intolerance and violence and they
    continue to be subject to this. Two thirds of the
    minority live in Eastern Europe. The enlargement
    of the European Union will eventually bring in
    between five and six million EU citizens of Roma
    origin. After enlargement Roma will most probably
    seize the opportunities EU membership offers them
    to improve their situation. Many Roma live in
    poor regions, which will soon be able to apply
    for funding from the main EU funds. The extent to
    which an enlarged Union succeeds in improving the
    plight of the Roma may be seen as a test of
    Europes social and democratic identity.

40
Bulgaria and Roma minority
  • In the census conducted in 2001, 4.6 of the
    population identified themselves as Roma and 9.4
    as of Turkish ethnic origin.
  • As reported in previous years, Bulgaria has a
    good Framework Programme on integration of
    minorities targeted at the Roma. Regrettably,
    however, this has not yet been put into practice.
    There has been very little change in the
    situation of the Roma minority and there are no
    significant developments in their socio-economic
    situation and living conditions to report.

41
BG and Roma Minority
  • According to previous Regular Reports, Bulgaria
    continues to respect human rights and freedoms,
    and continues to fulfil the Copenhagen Criteria.
  • However, concerning the Roma community, little
    has been done to remedy problems of social
    discrimination or to take concrete action to
    improve very poor living conditions. The adoption
    of comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation
    would be an important step forward in this
    regard.

42
BG and Roma
  • Roma continue to suffer from social inequalities
    due to the accumulation over time of factors that
    have worsened living conditions. There has been
    no change in the very high rates of unemployment.
    Discrimination, and cases of violence against
    members of the Roma community continue to be
    reported. This situation needs to be addressed
    urgently. In this context, the adoption of
    comprehensive antidiscrimination legislation
    would be an important step forward.

43
BG and Roma
  • The "Minority rights and protection of
    minorities" section of the Commission's reports
    has traditionally been Bulgaria's weakest area.
    And the situation is intolerable the Roma
    minority is almost completely excluded from
    participation in local and national government
    the educational system segregates Roma children
    in separate elementary, middle, and high schools
    the health care infrastructure and utilities in
    Roma neighbourhoods are by far the worst in the
    country.
  • Everything about the Commission's criticism is
    justified, except the fact that similar
    conditions in Member States suffer no reprimand.

44
BG and Roma
  • Living conditions for the Roma remain extremely
    poor. There is little progress to report on the
    call in the Framework Programme for
    municipalities to legalise illegally-built homes
    in Roma neighbourhoods, which means there is very
    limited access to public services. Where measures
    are taken, this is mainly through EC and other
    donor-funded projects. Major urbanisation
    projects are under way in Sofia and Plovdiv. Few
    municipalities in Bulgaria have approved
    strategic plans for regional development where
    projects for legalising the illegal Roma housing
    and the urbanisation of Roma quarters are
    included.

45
BG and Roma
  • Problems remain as regards access to the
    health care system. Not all of the Roma
    population is aware of the procedures and the
    need to have health insurance. Financial
    contributions required from the patients, no
    matter how small, are often too high.
    Participation in education remains poor. Poverty
    is one of the factors in this, as families cannot
    provide their children with basic items for
    school or children have to help with income
    generation. Out of Roma children who do enter
    school, very few go on to secondary education.

46
BG and Roma
  • As reported last year, schools in Roma areas
    remain in practice segregated and offer
    low-quality education and poor facilities. Roma
    make up about 32 of children in special''
    schools and 21 of children in labour education
    schools. Efforts need to be made to combat
    segregation and encourage integration. Whilst
    some initiatives are underway through donors to
    address segregation, this is not yet in practice
    a Government policy.

47
BG and Roma
  • Unemployment is unusually high among Roma,
    exceeding a shocking 90 percent in some areas.
    Moreover, only one percent of them have higher
    education, 36 percent have reached only primary
    education, 40 percent have secondary education,
    and 16 percent of them are totally illiterate,
    according to official data dating from 1998. More
    recent surveys indicate that 80 percent of the
    Gypsies in Bulgaria have only primary education
    or are illiterate.
  • At the same time, secondary education is free for
    all Bulgarian citizens, no matter of their ethnic
    origin, and while other minorities living in the
    country, such as Turks, Jews and Armenians, are
    well integrated in society, this is not the case
    with the Roma.
  • Huge amounts of money are allocated for their
    integration into society from various programs
    and organizationsnational, international,
    governmental and privateand while these projects
    surely achieve some relatively positive results,
    Roma still fail to live well with the rest of
    society, and often claim to be subject to
    discrimination.

48
BG and Roma
  • Many Roma men work as non-skilled construction
    workers in the summer. But many young students
    and all kinds of unemployed people do the same as
    well. And while students earn pocket money and
    then go on holiday at the Black Sea coast, and
    while other unemployed people save money to feed
    their families, Roma people just continue to beg
    in the streets of all major Bulgarian
    townswaiting for you in front of churches or
    museums, restaurants and bars, shops or
    administrative buildings, and a polite denial for
    giving them money sometimes does not work.

49
BG and Roma
  • According to an opinion poll conducted among
    non-Roma Bulgarians, less then one percent of
    them can imagine marrying a person of Roma
    origin, and less then ten percent of them would
    welcome Gypsy neighbors next door. If this
    negative attitude is really due to prejudice, the
    solving of this problem would not be easy either.
    As interesting proof to this statement could
    serve the number of widely used Bulgarian idioms,
    such as "you lie like an old Gypsy" or "you snore
    like a Gypsy's horse." Even the popcorns at the
    bottom of the microwave packet that have failed
    to burst are called "Gypsies." And Bulgarians
    have the notion of "Gypsy's work" which comes to
    say that a certain thing is not well done.

50
BG and Roma
  • Well, it will not surprise anybody in Bulgaria
    that Roma people have a similar notion-they say
    "Bulgarian work" and the phrase has a negative
    context, according to an interview of Nikolay
    Kirilov, the leader of the Roma organization in
    the town of Lom, by a weekly national newspaper.

51
BG and Roma
  • Obviously, Bulgaria has a very serious problem
    with its Roma minority. The international image
    of the country will continue to be taunted by the
    striking misery of the Gypsies and by the reports
    of discrimination, unequal opportunity and
    intolerance against them, unless the situation
    visibly improves. And unlike other many other
    social problems that Bulgaria faces, resolving
    this does not depend only on the government.
    Society, with all its ethnic groups, needs to
    change in order to diminish the huge gaps that
    set aside the Roma from the rest of the people.
  • One thing that is clear is the current situation
    within a large group equaling as much as ten
    percent of the whole population, living in misery
    separately from the others, should be resolved as
    early as possible. But who needs to change first,
    Bulgarians or Roma? And how should this change be
    encouraged, when it is often stated that Roma
    people have a specific culture that should be
    preserved, and when, at the other end, Bulgarians
    don't really care about Roma welfare, often
    thinking of them as of second-hand people.

52
BG and Roma
  • On the other hand, the funds that the Government
    invests in order to secure the reaching of the
    aims of the Framework Program are more than
    modest there are no data for 19992001 on the
    funds allocated for its implementation. According
    to estimates, the Government spent about 30 EUR
    per Roma capita for all Roma problems
    elimination of unemployment, improvement of the
    living conditions, improvement of the health
    status, securing equal access to qualitative
    education, etc. For 2004 the government had
    provided to spent about 35 EUR per Roma capita
    for the same goals. It is clear that on the
    background of the needs of the Roma, the amount
    of this money is extremely small. Furthermore,
    the Bulgarian State does not spend its own money
    for achieving the aims of the Framework Program.
    It is a well-known fact that almost all the
    funds, which the state spends, come from foreign
    sources. For political reasons the state avoids
    to take money directly from its own domestic
    incomes. And this has been the sustainable policy
    of all Bulgarian governments after 1989.

53
BG and Roma
  • There is political commitment from the
    government to remedy their problems, but more
    effort must be put into translating this into
    concrete action and major efforts and resources
    will be required to reverse the situation of
    discrimination, poor living conditions, economic
    hardship, chronic unemployment, poor health care,
    appalling housing conditions and lack of
    effective access to education. Also there are
    practices in access to social support and health
    care where particular eligibility criteria can
    have a discriminatory effect, making it difficult
    in practice for Roma to gain access to social
    support. A precondition for non-contributory
    health services is access to social support, so
    this also affects access to health services.

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BG and Roma
  • Since the welcome adoption of the framework
    programme for the integration of Roma into
    society, some progress has been made but in
    general implementation of the programme has been
    progressing slowly, so the short-term Accession
    Partnership has been only partially met until
    now.
  • If the Framework Programme is to be effectively
    implemented, institutional and administrative
    strengthening of the National Council on Ethnic
    and Demographic Issues (NCEDI) is essential.
    Whilst some appointments of well-qualified people
    were made, this is insufficient. Roma
    representation in the public administration at
    central level is very limited.

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BG and Roma
  • One more positive development is that some NGOs
    have pursued projects on desegregation of Roma
    schools.
  • Very little further progress has been made to
    meet the Accession Partnership priority to start
    implementation of the Roma Framework Programme,
    and to strengthen the National Council on Ethnic
    and Demographic Issues.
  • Though there had been a promising start on
    judicial reform, this needed to be translated
    into the political will to draw up a strategy for
    reform that could be driven forward by means of
    an integrated action plan. "It is important to
    avoid a piecemeal approach."

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BG and Roma
  • Conclusion
  • The Roma problem might be resolved by
    adopting an integrated approach, ensuring
    legislation was properly implemented and backing
    the whole process up with clear information
    campaigns that could help change the public
    mentality.
  • There are no easy solutions to the Roma problem.
    Probably the main cause of their social exclusion
    is their poverty. But it is important not to view
    the Roma as an isolated issue. Policy makers have
    to be clear that this is a common task for all
    Bulgarians to solve, and pressure from the EU had
    been an important factor in the search for change.

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Roma
  • Roma
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